Parent-Child Relations Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Evaluation of Brief Psychological Intervention for Parents of Adolescents: The Open Door Approach to Parenting Teenagers (APT), in London, England
Adolescence is a challenging period for young people and their parents. Changes during adolescence bring increases in social, psychological and behavioural problems (such as gang membership and drug abuse), and most long-lasting mental health problems start during this period. One of the strongest predictors of adolescent outcomes is the quality of parenting they receive at this stage. Parents often struggle with parenting adolescents, leading to feelings of stress and incompetence which, when reaching clinical levels, result in physical and mental health difficulties for parents and their children. This puts significant strain on community, social and mental health services. While the effectiveness of programmes to support parents of adolescents is certain, most are group-based and struggle to retain participants, especially amongst those who need help most: clinically stressed, and single parents. There are no standard care pathways for these parents, which leads to chronic problems and high long-term cost. The present study aims to measure the effectiveness of the Open Door's Approach to Parenting Teenagers (APT) - a manualised, six-session individual parenting intervention focusing on the relationship between parent and adolescent. This brief intervention, developed with awareness of the organisational realities and overarching aims of the National Health Service (NHS), has shown good results amongst clinically stressed parents in a pilot trial. The next phase in evaluating this approach is ruling out spontaneous recovery, by randomly assigning participants to APT or a waiting list control and comparing their results after the intervention, and again after 3 months. If successful, this study will have a major impact on communities around the United Kingdom (UK) - offering an evidence-based, non-proprietary intervention that can be easily disseminated.
This study is the next step in the evaluation trajectory of the Open Door Approach to
Parenting Teenagers (APT), and is a randomised controlled trial investigating whether
receiving APT is more effective than being on a Waiting List (WL) in a sample of 60 parents
of adolescents. We hypothesise that in comparison to those on the WL, those receiving APT
will show significant improvements in:
- parental stress;
- parent-adolescent relationship;
- adolescent and parent wellbeing and mental health outcomes;
Secondary aims of the study will include:
- Ascertaining treatment fidelity
- Disseminating outcomes to inform policymakers, commissioners and providers, to
facilitate evidence-based decisions about community services.
Procedure This trial will be carried out at two clinical sites in North London over 12months.
Method:
Parents and adolescents in the APT condition will be measured 3 times: at baseline,
end-of-treatment, and follow-ups at three after the end-of-treatment. Those in WL will be
measured three times from pre-treatment to three months follow-up. Then they will be offered
APT. Measures are grouped into four batteries: for the parent, the adolescent, the therapist
and an observer, and they will measure changes in parental stress, perceptions of the parent
about their adolescent's psychopathology and relational problems, aspects of parenting
relevant to aetiology and treatment of adolescent issues. The batteries also include
variables mediating recovery, therapeutic alliance, health services utilisation and
therapists' adherence to the ATP model.
Analysis plan:
The primary outcome will be analysed using within- and between-groups mean differences to
estimate treatment effects. Results will be disseminated through scientific papers, academic
conferences, the Open Door (OD) website, and reports will be distributed among educational
and health institutions in our local network. If results have merit, the intervention manual
will be published, and training will be offered to professionals outside OD. If successful,
we anticipate this study to have a major impact on communities around the UK. It is a
non-proprietary intervention that can be easily disseminated.
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